NM Twittersphere: ABQ City Council, Mother Jones, Gov. TV Ads

This is the first in an ongoing installment that takes a weekly look at how New Mexican's are utilizing Twitter to digest, comment on and reformat the news of the day.  For those unfamiliar with Twitter, it is a social web application that allows users to connect and "follow" other users, giving the ability to post messages and view messages of the created network in real time.  Each post is limited to 140 characters.  The brevity of the format, its accessibility by smartphone, and its ability to reach large audiences immediately, has transformed the world of "breaking news." It has also transformed the way people comment on the news.  Applications like TweetDeck and HootSuite allow users to edit and comment on “Tweets” they find in their feed and pass on to their personal audience.  Users pass on URL’s to news stories, images and videos or simply use text to comment on anything they wish.  New Mexico Mercury uses Twitter to distribute the stories that appear on the site, keep up with any breaking news of the day, as well as to aggregate timely and important tweets to our “Who’s Talking” widget on the right side of our homepage. 

So here’s a roundup of last week.  Let us know what you think.

 

Activism at the ABQ City Council on Monday

 

Reconvened on Thursday night

 

More dirt on Martinez & Co. from Mother Jones

 

Political Ads hit TV

 

Clown Shoes

More next week.  If you think there's a Tweet that should be highlighted, point it out to the Mercury on Twitter or use the hashtag #NMTwittersphere.

 

(Image derived from works by Nicolas Raymond and Andreas Eldh)




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